ANALYSIS: Panthers smash Storm to go six unbeaten - but Luai might be in trouble for shoulder charge

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

It’s just over two months until the Grand Final, but we might be able to call it now: if anyone stops Penrith making it three in a row, it will be a miracle.

This was their sixth win in succession and their tenth in eleven. At no point in their dynasty have the Panthers looked so dominant.

Melbourne, currently in fourth and one of the most respected teams in the competition, were absolutely crushed, 26-6, without Penrith really ever getting into top gear.

Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai ran the show, Stephen Crichton offered additional spark and Brian To’o scored two trademark tries the corner.

But beyond the highlights, it was pure domination. The first half was played entirely in the Storm end, suffocating Melbourne and fatiguing them such that they eventually relented. 

In the second, the Panthers seemed to treat the game as an opposed defensive session, batting away attacks on their goalline in a manner that made light of the talent available to the Storm. They were simply too good.

The only black mark might be over Luai, who was put on report for a shoulder charge with Nelson Asofa-Solomona. Ivan Cleary laughed it off, but the five eighth appeared to catch the Storm forward in the face and was off his feet when he made the contact.

“Very happy tonight,” said the coach.

“We started a little scratchy, but the back end of the first half was strong.

“Second half was a little different where they had field position but our defence in our end was possibly as good as we’ve done all year. That’s going to keep us in good stead.

“The last couple of games we’ve had a fair bit of possession, so you can control the game, but in the second half we didn’t. It’s really good that, against a quality team who were throwing plenty at us, the boys kept finding a way and turning up.”

Melbourne are now in a fight for the top four, with Canberra able to draw level with them on Sunday before the pair clash at AAMI Park next weekend. Souths and Cronulla, in hot pursuit, face off tomorrow night.

“The Panthers are really good at playing the possession and field position game,” said Craig Bellamy.

“They did a great job in the first half. We helped them. We didn’t shoot ourselves in the foot, we blew our feet off with errors.

“It looked like we were looking for short cuts. That doesn’t work against a top team like that. You need to be squeaky clean to go with them. We did dumb things.”

The Storm will do it without George Jennings, too, who was taken off early with a medial ligament injury. Jahrome Hughes, too, missed with an ankle injury ahead of kick off, while Xavier Coates is out with a hip problem.

The Panthers have no such worries. The minor premiership will surely be theirs, and it would be a very brave punter who bet against them making it a threepeat at the start of October.

What more do you say about Penrith?

The Panthers stumbled for about 0.4 seconds early in the year and everyone wrote them off. It all looks a bit silly now.

Naturally, losing a few close ones – even the aberration to the Tigers in Bathurst – didn’t make them a bad side, or really, any worse than they have been at any point in the six again era, and if anything, seems to have inspired the Panthers to be even better.

They know better than anyone that you don’t win anything at this time of year, but it’s hard to watch this side at the moment and then imagine anyone beating them at all. They’re that far ahead.

There’s an argument that Brisbane can challenge, but they’re probably a year off. Souths have defeated them at near-enough full strength – the only side to properly challenge the style that Penrith have near perfected – but they’ve not hit close to those heights in months. 

On this evidence, the Storm aren’t a chance. They were great for 20 minutes in Melbourne a few weeks ago, but a Cleary-less Panthers reeled them in and won in the end.

This time, it lasted about the same. Those Melbourne took the lead, they were never in control and couldn’t cope with the pressure, the possession and the patience of the Panthers.

Tonight, it was their ability to spread wide in good ball that unpicked the lock, but next week, it’ll be something else. 

In truth, while the attack changes, it’s always the defence that wins it. Melbourne got one through a clever early switch, but beyond that passage of play, the Storm accumulated nothing.

They visited the Panthers end for one measly tackle – the one from which Young Tonumaipea scored – and that was it for the first half.

How much do Melbourne read into this?

The Storm aren’t used to being humbled in this manner. They’re in the business of learning from their defeats, too, and largely come back stronger.

That’s the reputation built over decades of work under Bellamy, but the 2023 edition has shown more cracks than most.

They looked bereft at times tonight. While that was in the face of outstanding Penrith defence – and supreme control early on – it was still notable that Melbourne didn’t offer, really, anything of note with the ball.

Cameron Munster, not for the first time this year in big games, was anonymous. It’s hard to put a finger on why the Queensland superstar has been so quiet, especially given how good he was at points in Origin. 

In his younger days, he might have done something off-the-wall, maybe even wild, to inject himself in. Jarome Luai, constantly on the wind up, or Cody Walker, never far from a scrap, would likely have done something like that were they in Munster’s position today. 

Instead, he was the worst thing of all for a superstar half. He was passive. Harry Grant, too, was subdued and Nick Meaney did little.

It’s clear that this is not the match of other Storm teams in terms of talent. Justin Olam is well off his best and is languishing in reserve grade, along with the injuries to Coates, Hughes and Reimis Smith.

But even so, it can only be seen as a demonstration of the levels that are on offer in the NRL at the moment, and how far Melbourne are from them.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-05T01:22:42+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Great line. I watched the game against Cronulla without the sound on because Ennis was commentating. Without the commentary I picked up different things. Like the look of shock and bewilderment between the Sharks players, and the incredible speed that Penrith function at. The Panthers training program must be world class to allow them to be so efficient at that speed.

2023-08-05T00:44:51+00:00

TinRattler

Roar Rookie


At least he didn't jump off the bus and screwed a club over

2023-08-05T00:14:57+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


My bad, Hughes, Papenhuyzen and Coates to come back in. Although you could have been mistaken to think Munster didn’t play, he was largely unsighted.

2023-08-05T00:10:06+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


He hasn't, it's hypothetical. Coaches are largely the victims of their roster is the point I'm making. Bellamy is the one who defies that thought more than the others in my opinion.

2023-08-04T23:54:33+00:00

Muzz Manyana

Roar Rookie


I like Webster but he hasn't won a comp yet as head coach.

2023-08-04T23:03:32+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Appreciate The Barry compass.

2023-08-04T22:54:33+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


How has Wayne Bennett ever been in the Penrith situation as a coach? The clubs he’s been at for the most part, are the clubs that are buying the best players. Not losing good players every year. Bellamy has created a system that works very well. He’s always had the best 9’s , 6’s, 7’s for the most part . Plus some very good 1’s & other positions. The Storm have also recruited very well at junior levels especially. Plus been able to keep a lot of these very good players in their system somehow ? He’s still taken a player from nowhere like Cronk & made him a good halfback. Other fairly ordinary players a plenty , have looked far better at Melbourne. Makes him a better coach than Bennett to me.

2023-08-04T22:53:05+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


After that performance last night, the Panthers are the side to beat and have already won the 2023 GF imo, the Storm looked amateurish. The Panthers discipline and structure is way above every other side in the comp and that is what makes them win games. South’s could do it but by gee they will have to improve and play some cracking games as will the Broncs as the Warriors have no chance as do any other side in the 8. Its all over red rover, the NRL finals are just a watch for the minors imo.

2023-08-04T22:29:43+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Andrew Webster … Very good year. Lucky the Warriors bought him from Penrith. After he got more high level coaching experience ,at the Panthers. No need for this comment either .Just know that you’ll enjoy it.

2023-08-04T22:27:55+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


As the game went on I was thinking about Bellamy's legacy and then Cleary's if the Storm win the comp. Despite the last few years being all about one team , the Pennies , if the Storm get up they will share the honors with them over the last four years and Bellamy will further enhance his stellar reputation. If the Panthers get up then Cleary will compared with the best coaches of all time perhaps. Jack Gibson won three in a row but he also had one of the best backlines ever and at the Roosters he had one of the best teams ever. I'm guessing that if the Pennies signed Bennett as coach a few years back and Cleary stayed at the Tigers that Bennett would be undisputed as the best coach ever and Cleary would be forgotten about? Poor old Bellyache is looking like he needs a holiday but Ivan looks like he's just come back from six weeks in paradise. I do admire Bellamy's conduct in interviews though , he's honest and not resentful of being questioned.

2023-08-04T22:24:08+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Sure you do. Regardless of your anti Saints, Penrith , Penrith player diatribe. Saints are the high achievers at both of those cup levels this season. More power to Sydney’s west. :thumbup:

2023-08-04T22:20:45+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


He has one more week’s suspension & then available again. Still another player available to the club.

2023-08-04T21:49:44+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Luke Sommerton is a future Panther 9. Not far away.

2023-08-04T21:44:02+00:00

TinRattler

Roar Rookie


No way Andrew Webster

2023-08-04T21:43:59+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


The Mike Tyson line: everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face.

2023-08-04T21:43:18+00:00

TinRattler

Roar Rookie


Gone for the year

2023-08-04T21:42:47+00:00

TinRattler

Roar Rookie


St Marys still raiding other clubs juniors like they did in the 90s. I know 2 clubs they killed off

2023-08-04T20:27:03+00:00

The Sporacle

Roar Rookie


Swap jerseys and they look like the 17 Storm side. The control and faith in the game plan :thumbup:

2023-08-04T15:59:13+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Here’s a curve ball for the club . St.Mary’s are the run away minor premiers in the Sydney Cup & Ron Massey Cup . The close relationship between the Panthers & St.Mary’s Saints ( a founding Penrith area club ) could see more good players being available to the Panthers . It was only a few years ago that Penrith had quite a few injuries & got permission to play about 7 Saints players in their NSW Cup side. Those players did very well at that time. Hooker Luke Sommerton is one Saints player playing NSW Cup for the Panthers & recently upgraded , from Saints in 2022.

2023-08-04T15:42:17+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


The worst thing for the rest of the comp is that Parra won't be in the 8. They seem one of the few teams that can really trouble the Panthers.

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